Page 72 of The Monster Hunters


  I had run into MHI headquarters long enough to grab my go-bag and give Dorcas a brief rundown. She had been trying to raise the others as we had left. I shoved my MHI-issued earpieces in, partially to protect my hearing from the siren, but also to check to see if any of my people were in range. I was alone. The radio mounted on the SUV’s dash was tuned to the Monster Control Bureau’s encrypted channel, so I knew that their strike force had mobilized and moved to the Buzzard Island Amphitheater, now only a few miles ahead of us.

  “Alpha Team is in position outside the concert and holding,” said someone over the radio.

  “Any suspicious activity?” Agent Myers asked over the airwaves.

  There was a long pause of open air. “Uh, sir, most of the people here are suspicious looking.” Apparently they had never been to a Cabbage Point Killing Machine show before. Their tours were legendary. You could drop all sorts of weird supernatural creatures into one of their average gigs and nobody would notice.

  My phone rang and I hurriedly pulled it from the small pouch on the front of my armor. “Yeah?”

  “Z?” It was Albert Lee. “Dorcas just got ahold of me.”

  “Where are you?”

  “We’re a couple miles north of Cazador.”

  “Who you got?”

  “Me and Grant. Dorcas raised Harbinger. They turned back too.” Excellent. Lee was a good man, and Grant, say what you would about him, was a known quantity, more than I could say about my current carpool. “Listen, I’ve got to tell you something. Dorcas said it was Force and Violence. I’ve been reading up on them. Be really careful.”

  Franks must have somehow, impossibly, heard that. “Put him on speaker.”

  I complied so the Feds could hear. “First, what can they do? Second, how do we waste them?”

  “Nobody really knows what they are. The descriptions sound kind of like an ogre and an ogress, but they’re too fast, too smart, and apparently indestructible. Esmeralda thought they were Greek, and they’ve been seen in that part of the world a lot, for at least three thousand years, but from the descriptions, I think they’re oni.”

  “Three thousand years?” Herzog said incredulously. “Bull.”

  Franks held up one hand to silence her.

  “What’s an oni?” I asked.

  “Far Eastern legends talk about them a lot. They’re evil spirits that have gained a physical body, usually really big and strong. They suck the life out of other things in order to power their own bodies indefinitely. That’s probably what Skippy meant by getting paid in souls. I don’t see why some of them couldn’t wander over to Europe and end up in that area’s folklore.”

  Some Hunters just seemed to geek out at monster factoids. “That’s great. Now how do we kill them?”

  “Beats me,” he answered. “MHI has never killed an oni that I can find record of. Esmeralda said that bullets bounced off of them.”

  “Great . . .” I muttered. “We’ll improvise.”

  “Electricity,” Archer chimed in. “Enough current will stun an oni. That’s what the field manual says.”

  “There’s more. When MHI went up against them last time, they had a hard time tracking them, which is weird since witnesses say they’re huge. But they would suddenly appear, kill something, then poof, they were just gone. So I’m guessing they’re either able to fly or teleport. The Fed file said the necromancer can create shadow portals, so maybe they can too. They might even shape-shift, so who knows . . .”

  “Well, that narrows it down. Thanks, Al. See you there. Go to the radio band when you reach Motown.” I dropped the phone back in its pouch. This wasn’t shaping up to be a fun night.

  Updates continued to come in from the strike force as they surrounded the concert. They were all in position. “Stay low profile and hold your position for now,” Myers ordered his teams. “Wait for the Condition to make their move first. Our primary concern is capturing a Condition operative. Civilian casualties are secondary. Myers out.”

  “What?” I shouted and slammed my fist into the glove box. Mosh was a sitting duck up there on stage. “Tell them to go in there and grab my brother now!”

  Franks shook his head. “That’s not the mission.”

  “Bullshit it’s not. You’re using him as bait, like you used me. He’s not part of this.” I reached over for the radio, but suddenly Franks’ ham fist clamped around my left hand, immobilizing it as easily as if I were a child.

  “He is now,” Franks said, blank eyes never leaving the road as he steered with one hand between freeway traffic at absurd speeds.

  “That’s my brother out there. Don’t you have any family, Franks?”

  He scowled. “Yeah. Big family.”

  “Would you just leave them to die?”

  “Not my problem . . .”

  Something broke. I’d had enough. Mosh wasn’t going to die if I could help it. Fury bubbled up from the pit of my stomach, as my STI .45 cleared its Kydex drop leg holster with a snap. I screwed the fat muzzle into Frank’s ear, hard, and snapped, “Order them to get Mosh, right now.”

  It only took the Goon Squad a second to react. There was a click of a manual safety as Herzog put her HK .45 against the base of my skull. “Drop the gun, Pitt! Drop it!” she screamed. Archer was a split second slower but he slammed his Sig 229 into my head as well.

  “Shut up!” I shouted. I wasn’t going to let my brother get killed for their stupid mission. My finger was on the trigger and blasting Franks at this speed would surely end us all. “Call Myers!” Spit flew from my lips. “Now!”

  Franks didn’t take his eyes off the road, but he did unconsciously squeeze my left hand harder. Bones creaked and I grimaced. “Negative,” he said.

  “Owen, put the gun down,” Torres urged softly. “Use your brain, man. We warned you about the Condition. They’ll just keep on attacking everyone you’ve ever loved until they get you. We have to capture some of them or this will go on forever. Please, put the gun down.”

  Franks was utterly calm, even with a silver .45 slug aimed down his ear canal. “Do it.”

  My brother was going to be killed and there wasn’t a thing I could do about it from here . . . Damn it. I couldn’t threaten Franks. Shooting him wouldn’t accomplish a thing. Deflated, I thumbed the safety back on and slowly lowered my gun. Franks let go of my aching hand and went back to 10 and 2 on the wheel. Archer and Herzog kept their guns trained on me.

  “Hand your piece back, slowly!” she shouted, voice shrill in my ear. “Do it or I’ll blow your brains out! You’re under arrest.”

  “Screw you,” I said. She pushed even harder with the muzzle. I knew that I’d gone way too far this time. “All right.” Slowly, I passed the custom long-slide, double-stack pistol, turning it back butt first. She thumped me again, and I handed Abomination over my head, the stubby and bulky shotgun and grenade launcher combo difficult to pass between the seats. Another thump and I sent back my secondary STI off my left hip, this one a compact, bobbed and chopped .45.

  “Everything.” She whacked me again for good measure.

  I slowly passed back the two Spyderco knives I kept on each hip pocket, then dragged out the 21” Chitilangi heavy kukri that replaced my lost Ganga Ram. MHI was one of Himalayan Imports’ best customers. “Careful, that one’s sharp,” I said as I passed it back. Hopefully one of them would cut their fingers off by accident. Another thump. I was going to be covered in lumps from that hag. “Damn it,” I muttered as I reached down to my ankle and pulled out the snub-nosed .357 Airweight Smith & Wesson that I kept stashed for worst-case scenarios. Now the three of them had a pile of weapons to contend with.

  “How many guns do you have?” Torres asked in exasperation.

  “It’s a Second Amendment thing. You wouldn’t understand.”

  “You’re under arrest for threatening a federal agent, Pitt. Put your hands on your head,” Herzog snarled.

  “Uh . . . he’s still got hand grenades,” Archer pointed out.

&nb
sp; “Stand down,” Franks ordered his men, sounding exasperated. It took them a moment to respond. “I said STAND DOWN.” That time both metallic weights left my head. Franks turned and looked at me, not paying any attention to the freeway that was flying past. For once he actually showed some emotion, and unfortunately for me, it was anger. His black eyes burned a hole through my soul as he sedately said the most words I had ever heard from him at one time. “Primary mission. Keep Pitt alive. We need live bait, so I can’t twist your head off. But if you ever point a gun at me again, you’ll pray for the Old Ones to take you away, because compared to what I’ll do, the Elder Things will be a fucking picnic.” He veered us past a semitrailer without looking, and it zipped by so quickly that it was just a silver blur. Franks just kept staring, his black eyes containing nothing but barely controlled rage. The three agents tried to shrink back through the seats. “Got it?”

  “Yes.”

  “Good.” Then he slugged me.

  It was so unbelievably fast, so staggeringly hard, that I didn’t even see it coming. A big fist crashed into my cranium like a lightning bolt from a clear blue sky. A bomb went off inside my gray matter. My head rebounded against the bulletproof glass of the passenger side door hard enough to crack it. He didn’t just hit me in one place, but it was like he had somehow punched my entire face at once. My eyes automatically filled with tears and blood billowed out my nose in a froth of bubbles.

  I was stunned, reeling, my brain trying to process what the hell had just happened as I came back to full consciousness either a minute or maybe a day later. “Ouch,” I croaked, with the ultimate of understatements.

  Franks was back to driving insanely through the evening traffic. The bright lights of the state capitol and downtown Montgomery were off to our right. He took one hand off the wheel long enough to crack his knuckles. “Now we’re even.”

  The Buzzard Island Amphitheater was a new facility, just across the Alabama river, north of Montgomery. It had been a narrow patch of damp, low dirt for most of recorded history, but they had built it up with oceans of concrete, and put in a top-of-the-line convention and concert facility. It was a large, oval building, with a bulging glass dome for a roof, and giant, stainless-steel spires that were probably supposed to be some sort of industrial-modern-art thing. Tonight there were several large spotlights staggered around the amphitheater, casting giant beams seemingly forever into the clear night sky in big circular patterns.

  We tore into the parking lot at just under eighty miles an hour, leaving a thick parabolic curve of rubber as we left the main road and got serious air off a speed bump. Our sociopathic driver nearly ran down the orange-vested traffic directors, ignoring all rules of both safety and courtesy, as he searched the lines of vehicles for his target. Apparently Franks found it, because he gunned the engine, cut off another car, and hammered the SUV across the pavement, only to hit the brakes at the last possible second and slide in sideways behind a large, black, SWAT-style van at the far end of the lot. The giant unmarked van seemed appropriate, because that was Myers’ idea of low profile, after all.

  We piled out of the SUV and around the back of the van, where several black-clad agents were clustered out of sight of the people walking around the lot. Still dizzy from the sucker punch, I stumbled around the vehicle, holding one arm up to my face to pinch off my bleeding nose. Agent Myers was sitting on the back steps of the van, listening to a radio with one ear and to his phone with the other. He was nodding, and it wasn’t in time with the music throbbing from the far end of the lot either. Franks put one massive hand on my chest and shoved me back against the passenger side door. “Stay here.”

  He didn’t want to get in trouble for bringing me.

  “Watch him,” Franks told the Goon Squad, then he turned and went to his superior’s side. Torres took the front of the vehicle, Herzog the rear, and Archer stayed right by me. The three agents folded their arms, rifles dangling from their tac-slings, as they waited for me to try something else stupid. I suppose at this point I should consider myself in custody, though the MCB weren’t the kind of cops who read people their rights . . . Last rites, maybe. Myers glanced up, obviously surprised to see his subordinate. They were far enough away that I couldn’t hear what they were saying, but Myers appeared really ticked when he saw me. He began to shout and gesture wildly, but Franks said something that seemed to placate his boss momentarily.

  I had to do something. We were just going to sit out here until the bad guys attacked. Mosh was toast. I could probably kick the crap out of some of them and make a run for it, but even if I were to somehow ditch them, my guns were sitting in the back seat, and I would have to run across a couple hundred yards of parking lot, only to arrive unarmed where Condition assassins were stalking Mosh. So scratch that plan. Maybe I could pull it off if I had some help. Torres seemed like the least obnoxious of the bunch, but he was further away. “Archer,” I whispered to the nearest agent. “Those hit-monsters are going to murder my brother. We’ve got to get in there and save him.”

  “Shut up,” he said angrily, apparently still offended that I had threatened to shoot his commander. “We’re following orders.”

  “Is that why you volunteered for this? Letting civilians get slaughtered right under your nose, so you could follow orders? Come on, man. Do the right thing.” We were at the far side of the parking lot, well away from the crowds, but I nodded toward the throngs on the steps of the amphitheater. “How many of those kids have to die tonight?”

  Frustrated, he grabbed me by the straps of my armor, “As many as it takes, damn it! You don’t know what the Condition is capable of. They have to be stopped!” Then he tried to shove me against the SUV, but apparently he had forgotten that I was a giant brute of a man. I outweighed the thin agent by probably a hundred and thirty pounds. He barely succeeded in budging me.

  “Yeah, Franks makes it look easy,” I said.

  Feeling stupid, Archer let go. His Adam’s apple bobbed nervously, but his eyes were cold, angry, and he kept one hand on the pistol grip of his M4 carbine. “Just shut up, okay.” He jerked his head toward the improvised command center where his superiors were conferring. “Agent Myers knows what he’s doing. He’s a pro. Look . . . I don’t want your brother or anybody else to get hurt, but this is bigger than he is. This cult, they’re trying to awake something evil.” Archer realized he was talking too much. “Never mind. Just shut up.”

  The Fed wasn’t going to budge. I had to think of something else, fast.

  There was movement over Archer’s shoulder. Something small and black scurried low between the tightly packed rows of cars, then another shape, and another. How could I have been so stupid? I had forgotten all about them. A goggled head poked up over a Volkswagen’s hood, scanned the contingent of Feds and then glided back down, unseen by everyone but me.

  I softened my tone. “Look, Agent Archer, I’m not trying to be a jerk, but can I get a Kleenex or something? I’m bleeding all over my armor.” I gestured at my swollen nose. It really hurt, so that part wasn’t an act.

  “Serves you right . . .” He hesitated, scowling, but finally relented. “Okay, hang on a second.” He reached down and pulled open the Velcro tab on his first aid kit. He didn’t see the thing crawling out from under a nearby car, then rising silently behind him. The orc grabbed Archer by the strap on the back of his armor while simultaneously kicking both knees out from under him. The agent fell backward, pulled by the weight of his armor and equipment, crying out in surprise.

  It was my old pal, Edward. I only recognized him because he moved so smoothly that he made Bruce Lee look rickety. The orc didn’t even slow. He covered the distance to Torres, leaping into the air at the last second as the younger agent turned to see what the commotion was about. Edward’s heel collided with the Fed’s chest, kicking him back. Torres collided with the hood of a car, tripped, and sprawled onto the pavement. There was a thud from the other direction as another black shape cracked Herzog over the hea
d with a club. Gretchen didn’t have Edward’s moves, but she was mighty handy with her totem stick. The female agent went to the ground in a heap.

  The passenger door of the SUV from Hell flew open. “Noble One, hurry fast,” Skippy ordered. Franks had left the keys in it. I jumped into the seat as Gretchen climbed into the back. Still on the ground, Torres pulled his pistol, but Edward was on him in an instant and kicked the HK across the lot. The orc bent over and slugged Torres in the face, knocked him silly, spun him on his back like a turtle, and dragged him effortlessly over to Archer. He kicked the first agent again as he was struggling to rise, snatched a pair of handcuffs off Torres’ vest, and locked one agent’s wrist to the other one’s ankle.

  Skippy cranked it and the demon engine roared like a Tyrannosaurus Rex. He slammed it into reverse and the tires spun as we flew rearward, smashing the back armored bumper into a parked Corvette. The Corvette lost.

  Thirty feet away, Franks’ head snapped up. His hand flew under his coat and came out with a fat Glock. Skippy put it in drive and the massive vehicle jumped forward, Gretchen holding the door open as Edward dove through to safety. Franks aimed at Skippy but hesitated, probably more worried about his truck than violating his primary mission. Then we were speeding past. “Big Fed. Look mad,” Skippy grunted as he put the hammer down.

  I whipped around to see Franks sprinting after us, gun in hand. Skippy wasn’t kidding. He looked pissed.

  All orcs have gifts. I don’t know how it works exactly, but each of them has a unique ability. Edward’s was kicking ass. Gretchen was a remarkable healer. And Skippy, leader of the MHI orcs, brother of Edward, and husband of Gretchen (wife one of five), was a helicopter pilot of almost supernatural skill. However, that ability apparently didn’t translate into driving ground vehicles, as Skippy smashed the SUV brutally right down a line of parked cars, flinging headlights, glass, and bits of plastic in every direction. Concertgoers were forced to dive for safety as Skippy high-speed crunched his way toward the amphitheater entrance.